Tim Whitnall | |
Birth Name: | Timothy Charles Whitnall |
Birth Date: | 27 June 1961 |
Birth Place: | Canvey Island, Essex, England |
Nationality: | English |
Occupation: | Actor, playwright, screenwriter |
Years Active: | 1977–present |
Timothy Charles Whitnall (born 27 June 1961) is an English actor, playwright and screenwriter. He is known for playing Angelo in the long-running CITV series Mike and Angelo and narrating the BBC children's TV programme Teletubbies from 1997 to 2001.[1] As a writer, he has won a BAFTA and an Olivier Award for his work on TV movie Best Possible Taste: The Kenny Everett Story and play Morecambe.He is also a voice actor, providing voices on characters from television shows such as Fifi and the Flowertots, Roary the Racing Car, and Thomas & Friends.
Whitnall began his career in West End musical Elvis in 1977 after winning the role in an open call audition.[2] He has starred in many West End musicals including Grease, The Rocky Horror Show, and Good Rockin' Tonight.[3]
After making TV appearances for the musicals he was involved in, he began a career in television - presenting (and writing for) the BBC Schools series, "The Music Arcade" (with Lucie Skeaping), "Music Time", "Time and Tune", "Music Workshop", and "Let's Sing".[4] He also began making appearances as an actor, playing Jake in ITV children's drama The All Electric Amusement Arcade and Paul in Play for Today episode Not for the Likes of Us.
Whitnall is also known for providing many voice-overs and vocals for TV commercials, animations, and jingles. From the late 1980s to the channel's demise in 2000, he was an announcer on The Children's Channel, also providing the voice to the station's early 1990s mascot Link Anchorman.[5] He was also the voice for Woolworths mascot Keith the Alien in 1998.[6]
In 1990, he succeeded Tyler Butterworth in the role of alien Angelo in Children's sci-fi sitcom Mike and Angelo. He portrayed the character for ten series, until the show's end in 2000.[7]
Whitnall's theatre play The Sociable Plover, first performed at Old Red Lion Theatre in 2005,[8] was made into a feature film by Poisson Rouge Pictures and Solution Films (re-titled as The Hide) and received its UK première on Film4 in February 2009.[9] Following its screen release at the ICA Cinema, London, the film was released on DVD in January 2010. For this work, Whitnall was nominated for Best First Feature Length Screenplay category in the 2010 Writer's Guild of Great Britain Awards.
Whitnall's next play Morecambe – a tribute to the late comedian Eric Morecambe – won a Fringe First Award[10] for 'innovation and excellence in new writing' at the 2009 Edinburgh Festival Fringe. The show opened at London's Duchess Theatre the following December and toured the UK through 2010. The piece was nominated in two separate categories in the 2010 Laurence Olivier Awards[11] and won the 'Best Entertainment' category.[12]
In 2012, BBC Four screened Whitnall's 90-minute drama Best Possible Taste: The Kenny Everett Story,[13] which examined and celebrated the life of Kenny Everett. It was directed by James Strong, produced by Paul Frift and starred Oliver Lansley and Katherine Kelly. For it, Whitnall won the Breakthrough Talent Award in the 2013 BAFTA Television Craft Awards.[14]
During 2014, Whitnall joined the cast of the CGI version of the British TV series Thomas & Friends, providing the voices of the characters Timothy, Reg, Mike, Jerome, Oliver the Excavator and the UK version of Max.
Whitnall lives in Richmond, London with his partner, Anna Murphy, with whom he has a production company, Feather Productions Ltd.[15]
Year | Title | Role | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1980 | Play for Today | Paul | Episode: "Not for the Likes of Us" | |
1982 | The Music Arcade | Presenter | ||
Sunny Side Up | Presenter, various characters | |||
1983 | The All Electric Amusement Arcade | Jake | Main cast | |
1986 | C.A.T.S. Eyes | Jack | Episode: "Freezeheat" | |
1989 | The Bill | Rodgers | Episode: "Found Offending" | |
Bergerac | Desk Constable | Episode: "A True Detective" | ||
1989–2000 | Mike and Angelo | Angelo | Main cast | |
1993 | Backchat | Link Anchorman | Voice over | |
Link's Shorts | ||||
1994 | Link Looks Into Cartoons | |||
1994 | KTV | Dr. Hunk, Fred | Segments: General Accident, Arthur Square | |
1997–2001 | Teletubbies | Narrator | UK version | |
1998 | Tom and Vicky | Tom, Dickie, Flash | ||
2003–2004 | MechaNick | All male characters | ||
2005-10 | Fifi and the Flowertots | Aunt Tulip, Stingo and Hornetto | UK | |
2006 | Underground Ernie | Hammersmith, Jubilee, Paris, and Osaka | Voice over | |
2007 | The Beeps | Sleepy Beep | ||
2007–10 | Roary the Racing Car | Plugger, Mr. Carburettor and Farmer Green | UK | |
2008 | Britain's Got The Pop Factor | Performer in Eye-patch | ||
2008–09 | The Mr. Men Show | Mr. Lazy and Mr. Nervous | UK version, Voice over | |
2010 | Muddle Earth | Norbert Benson | Main cast | |
2012–15 | Tree Fu Tom | Zigzoo, Stink, Squirmtum, Chezz, and Rickety McGluman | Main cast, Voice over | |
2013 | Henry Hugglemonster | Various characters | Voice over | |
2014–2021 | Thomas & Friends | Max Timothy, Reg, Mike, Jerome, Oliver (Excavator) and The Deputy Minister | UK Version Recurring roles, Voice over | |
2021 | DinoCity | Dad | Main cast, Voice over |
Year | Title | Role | Venue | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1977 | Elvis | Young Elvis | London Astoria | |
1979 | Grease | Doody | ||
1981 | Godspell | Jesus | Young Vic Theatre | |
Spring Awakening | Melchior | Young Vic Studio, London | ||
1983 | Yakety Yak | Danny | UK Tour | |
1985 | The Lambusters | The Bloomsbury Theatre, London | ||
1988 | Be Bop a Lula | Eddie Cochran | The Playhouse, Liverpool; UK tour | |
1991 | The Rocky Horror Show | Riff-Raff | Picadilly Theatre, London | |
1992; 1993 | Good Rockin' Tonite | Eddie Cochran, Cliff Richard | Metropolitan, London; Liverpool Empire, Liverpool | |
1996-1997 | Elvis (revival) | Middle Elvis | UK Tour | |
1998-1999 | Four Steps to Heaven | Elvis, Eddie Cochran | ||
2005 | The Sociable Plover | Dave | Old Red Lion, Inner London |
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1986 | Billy the Kid and the Green Baize Vampire | Member of Billy the Kid's entourage | |
1996 | Famous Fred | Additional Vocals | |
1999 | Animal Farm | ||
2000 | Teletubbies: Christmas in the Snow | Narrator | Direct-to-video |
2005 | Renart the Fox | Renart (English dub) | |
2008 | Like Other People Do | Rich Man | Short |
2010 | Rainbow Magic: Return to Rainspell Island | Edison, King Oberon, Snow Beast and Bitten | |
Devil's Playground | News Anchor | ||
2014 | Timothy and Reg | Voice; Direct-to-video | |
2015 | Jerome | ||
Sodor's Legend of the Lost Treasure | Oliver the Excavator and Mike | Voice | |
2016 | Timothy and Mike | ||
2018 | Thomas & Friends: Big World Big Adventures! | Bill, Timothy and a Moai Head |
Year | Title | Role(s) | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1998 | Play with the Teletubbies | Narrator | UK | |
2000 | The World Is Not Enough | Charles Robinson |
Year | Title | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|
2008 | The Hide | Based on his play "The Sociable Plover" | |
2018 | Mr Sunshine | Short, Based on his play "Morecambe" |
Year | Title | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|
1985–86 | And There's More | ||
2010 | Best Possible Taste: The Kenny Everett Story | TV movie | |
2013 | Agatha Christie's Marple | Episode: "Greenshaw's Folly" | |
2021 | The Mallorca Files | Episode: "The Blue Feather" |
Year | Title | Venue | |
---|---|---|---|
1999 | Harry's Web | Theatre Royal, Windsor | |
2005, 2010 | The Sociable Plover | Old Red Lion, Inner London; UK Tour | |
2006 | The Fabulist | Old Red Lion, Inner London | |
2008, 2014 | Morecambe | Assembly Rooms, Edinburgh; UK Tour | |
2018 | Once Seen on Blue Peter | Chiswick Playhouse, London; Assembly Rooms, Edinburgh | |
2022, 2023 | Lena | The Beacon Arts Centre, Greenock; Assembly George Square (Gordon Aikman Lecture Theatre), Edinburgh | |
2023 | Notes from a Small Island | The Watermill Theatre, Newbury |
Year | Award | Category | Result | |
---|---|---|---|---|
2009 | "The Scotsman" Fringe First Award | Innovation and outstanding new writing | Morecambe | |
2010 | Best Entertainment | |||
Best First Feature-Length Film Screenplay | The Hide | |||
2013 | Breakthrough Talent | Best Possible Taste: The Kenny Everett Story | ||
2013 | Best Single Drama Shared with Paul Frift and James Strong |